Current Biology
Volume 32, Issue 22, 21 November 2022, Pages 4914-4924.e4
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Article
The impact of familiarity on cortical taste coding

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2022.09.053Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Imaging of the gustatory cortex was conducted in mice as they encountered tastes

  • Taste familiarization is associated with a reduction in taste-responsive neurons

  • Taste-evoked excited responses increased while inhibited responses decreased

  • Population responses to the accepted tastes become more similar with familiarization

Summary

The role of the gustatory region of the insular cortex in mediating associative taste learning, such as conditioned taste aversion, has been well studied. However, while associative learning plays a role in some taste behaviors, such as avoiding toxins, animals often encounter taste stimuli in their natural environment without explicit consequences. This type of inconsequential experience with sensory stimuli has been studied in other sensory systems, generally with the finding that neuronal responses habituate with repeated sensory exposure. This study sought to determine the effect of taste familiarity on population taste coding in the mouse gustatory cortex (GC). Using microendoscope calcium imaging, we studied the taste responses of visually identifiable neurons over 5 days of taste experience, during which animals could freely choose to consume taste stimuli. We found that the number of active cells in the insular cortex, as well as the number of cells characterized as taste-responsive, significantly decreased as animals became familiar with taste stimuli. Moreover, the magnitude of taste-evoked excited responses increased while inhibited responses decreased with experience. By tracking individual neurons over time, we identified a subpopulation of stable neurons present on all days of the taste familiarity paradigm and further characterized their taste coding properties. The population-level response across these stable cells was distinct for each taste quality when taste stimuli were novel, but population responses for readily consumed stimuli became more correlated as the stimuli became familiar. Overall, these results highlight the effects of familiarity on both taste-specific and non-taste responses in the gustatory cortex.

Keywords

gustatory cortex
insular cortex
taste
taste learning
awake imaging

Data and code availability

  • All data reported in this paper will be shared by the lead contact upon request.

  • All original code has been deposited at https://github.com/FletcherLab and is publicly available as of the date of publication. DOIs are listed in the key resources table.

  • Any additional information required to reanalyze the data reported in this paper is available from the lead contact upon request

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